If you've ever pitched a product idea to an invention help company, chances are you've heard the following advice: protect your idea, sketch it out, build a prototype, and find someone to invest in it.
That approach could cost you thousands of dollars, all with nothing to show for it.
The Invention Help Roadblock
The invention help process usually starts with a patent, often before you've even nailed down what product you're protecting. A basic patent can run $15,000 to $30,000, and at the end of it, you have nothing more than a piece of paper and protection for an idea that hasn't been validated yet.
From there, you’re told you need a sketch, a CAD rendering, and a prototype. Before long, you can find yourself spending nearly $70,000 on a prototype that isn’t designed for manufacturing. Beyond that, you don’t even have a manufacturing partner in the first place.
Product Margins: The True Success Indicator
How many have you sold?
What does it cost to make?
What are your margins?
These are questions you’re likely to hear from any prospective investor. If you can’t answer them, then you don’t have a business worth investing in.
Margins are the foundation that the entire product development process should be built on. Without advantageous margins, volume won't save you. More volume without good margins simply means more money lost.
How The Product Development Lifecycle Should Work
Instead of the fragmented, pay-as-you-go invention help model, 52Launch operates on a flat-fee, six-spoke Accelerator process designed to get a product to market with margins built in from day one:
- Market Research & Strategic Foundation – Understanding where the product fits, and whether it will actually sell.
- Brand Creation & Visual Identity – Built before a name is chosen, not after. Most inventors arrive with a name that isn't trademarkable, doesn't have an available domain, and can't be secured across social handles.
- Product Design & Development – This is where Design for Manufacturing (DFM) comes in. A sketch or CAD file isn't the same as a design that's actually manufacturable.
- Manufacturing Preparation – Making sure brand, design, and development teams are aligned before production begins.
- Marketing Strategy & Tactical Implementation – Ongoing coordination so the product being built matches the product that's being marketed.
- The Bridge Meeting & Go-to-Market Strategy – A final revalidation of every decision before committing to production tooling, since mistakes at this stage are the most expensive to fix.
Manufacturing Your Product Is Selling Your Product
Only about 10% of product ideas are strong enough to move forward into the development process. Of that group, an even smaller fraction actually have the resources, confidence, and market validation to succeed.
If the design isn't right, if the margins don't work, or if the brand isn't built strategically from the start, no amount of investment fixes it later.
Before spending money on a patent, a sketch, or a prototype, ask yourself one question: Will this actually sell and can I make it with margins?
Ready to turn your product idea into a reality and get it to market? Contact us today at 52Launch to get started.